U.S COMMITTEE FOR REFUGEES AND IMMIGRANTS
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Introducing “From the Archives” 

January 29, 2026

For more than a century, the U.S. Committee for Refugees and Immigrants has advocated for the rights and dignity of refugees, reporting regularly on harms committed against people on the move. For our 115th anniversary, we are turning to our archives, republishing historical material and pairing them with present-day reflections on how the lessons of the past still resonate today. Our archives reveal that the past holds a mirror to today’s unresolved challenges. Looking back, we see the moral clarity that past staff and contributors brought to condemning policies that endangered those fleeing persecution. Yet too often, that conviction has not guided the actions of policymakers and the international community in responding to the needs of refugees today. The lessons of history remind us of the need to act with the same urgency and compassion now. 

Today, we know it was wrong to turn away the victims of the Holocaust, of the Vietnam War, of Rwanda. But our duty to help the refugees of today is no different from our duty to help those who came before. Today, we observe how many countries around the world still refuse to protect those seeking safety from today’s cruelties. Across the world, walls, both visible and invisible, have been erected, aiming to keep people out rather than fostering policies that provide both protection and welcome. Haitian asylum seekers are still intercepted in the Caribbean and returned to a country the United States has evacuated its own citizens from. Three generations of Sahrawi people live in the Tindouf camps, without access to adequate drinking water. The Sudanese civil war has uprooted more than eleven million people from their homes. These and so many other stories of displacement must be told.

Our moral duty is to the refugees whose stories are still being written: those who take dangerous journeys across land and sea with the hope for safety and a better future and the generations who wait in camps yearning for freedom and the chance to build a new life. While history offers moral clarity, the present too often provokes moral decay. We know the world can and must do better.

History repeats when fear outweighs compassion. Learning from the past means choosing empathy over exclusion, safety over walls, and humanity over indifference. By embracing the lessons of the past, we can chart a path toward a more just and welcoming future. 

 

 

[from left to right] 1. Displaced Roma from Kosovo, taken by Bill Frelick, 1999 2. Somali refugees in Yemen, taken by Bill Frelick, 1992 3. U.S. food donation in Dadaab Refugee Camp, taken by Bill Frelick, 2001 4. Family in Konik II camp tent, taken by Bill Frelick, 1999 5. Bahr El Ghazal, Sudan, taken by Roger Winter, 1998, 6. Unmarked, property of the U.S. Committee for Refugees and Immigrants.


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